lunatic
foundation.rust-lang.org
Our great sponsors
lunatic | foundation.rust-lang.org | |
---|---|---|
86 | 23 | |
4,530 | 26 | |
0.7% | - | |
5.7 | 8.8 | |
about 1 month ago | 8 days ago | |
Rust | Nunjucks | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
lunatic
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Spinkube: Running WASM in Kubernetes
This reminds me of Lunatic [1], an Erlang-inspired runtime for WebAssembly. Unfortunately it seems like development stalled some months ago.
[1] https://lunatic.solutions/
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Spin 2.0 – open-source tool for building and running WASM apps
you can check out https://github.com/lunatic-solutions/lunatic for that
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Flawless – Durable execution engine for Rust
Very cool, and the approach demonstrated might be of interest to a similar problem we have in Ambient (our WASM game runtime that has competing processes that may need to retry interactions.)
That being said - what’s the relation to Lunatic [0]? Are you still working on Lunatic? Is this a side project? Or is it something completely separate?
[0]: https://lunatic.solutions/
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Async Rust Is A Bad Language
Curious too. I follow Lunatic [0] as a candidate for future use, and also wasmCloud [1].
[0] https://lunatic.solutions/
[1] https://wasmcloud.com
- Write Elixir NIFs in Rust
- A WASI VM?
- how can I add dynamic loading to do "plugins" for my Rust app?
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Wasix, the Superset of WASI Supporting Threads, Processes and Sockets
Check out Lunatic https://lunatic.solutions/
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Elixir and Rust is a good mix
There's a couple of Rust libs and frameworks inspired on Erlang in 'best of both worlds' attempts, such as https://lunatic.solutions
I found others like Lunatic before, but cannot remember right now.
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Anything close beam/otp for other languages?
There is a really good initiative called Lunatic : https://lunatic.solutions/
foundation.rust-lang.org
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Open source at Fastly is getting opener
Through the Fast Forward program, we give free services and support to open source projects and the nonprofits that support them. We support many of the world’s top programming languages (like Python, Rust, Ruby, and the wonderful Scratch), foundational technologies (cURL, the Linux kernel, Kubernetes, OpenStreetMap), and projects that make the internet better and more fun for everyone (Inkscape, Mastodon, Electronic Frontier Foundation, Terms of Service; Didn’t Read).
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Thekla should release the Jai compiler, but sell it
This is why some of the bigger programming languages have a consortium behind them, dedicated to maintaining the language and making decisions for its continued improvement. When you look at the logos at the bottom of the Rust Foundation page, you can see some pretty big names.
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Who "owns" Rust ?
The Rust foundation, which is a nonprofit general (delaware) corporation with bylaws, employees, a normal legal existence. It owns the trademarks and domain names, acts as a legal and administrative point of contact when one is needed, and has I think operational and funding responsibility for infrastructure (crates.io, CI, etc.) The foundation has members which are almost all corporate sponsors who donate money (and sometimes people) to further its mandate. There's a fairly broad set of companies involved here: Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Meta, Huawei, etc. etc.
- Me starting a new project
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The Python Paradox
When you say enterprise, who do you mean? Rust is absolutely being pushed by faang et al for example. Just look at the bottom of the Rust foundation page[0]. You do not see this support for things like Nim or Julia[1].
[0] https://foundation.rust-lang.org/
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Blog post: Rust in 2023
The Rust language is supported by the Rust Foundation, more details on that website. Financial donors to the Rust Foundation are about 30-40 companies currently, the bigger ones include Mozilla, Google, Microsoft, AWS, and Meta
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We Just Gave $260,028 to Open Source Maintainers
> https://foundation.rust-lang.org/ 15,000
With all due respect, they don't need this money. Rust is a great project, and deserving, but they already have plenty of sponsors.
I would have rather seen 150 x $100 go to smaller projects. So much great software is being written, by people who are barely scraping by, and even $100 could be the motivation for someone to finish something widely useful.
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New to Rust. How to setup Nvim as IDE?
So, let's clarify a couple things first about how the Rust and Cargo crates work. First off, there is no single company or entity who's the sole contributor to the core Rust tooling. Rust is an open source project to which anyone can view the codebase and contribute (though there's a select set of people who are responsible for approving changes to it and managing releases). It's worth noting this doesn't mean there isn't an organization responsible for the project however. The Rust Foundation are a non-profit who manages the core repositories and tooling, and is also responsible for setting high level goals for the language.
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Asahi Lina on her experience writing a driver in rust
I don't think it is the same as Java. There is no single company owning Rust. Several big companies are investing in rust foundation (https://foundation.rust-lang.org/) including Google in particular which had quite a story regarding Java.
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Why is Rust the most loved programming language in the world?
Recently, several big techs like Google, Microsoft, Mozilla and Amazon jointly launched a non-profit organization to help the language maintain itself by giving full support to the maintainers who lead and develop the project. Here at Vaultree we use Rust in our product and services, as we need to deliver data with reliability and agility to our customers, as we are in a business line where any error or inaccuracy can be costly, the adoption of Rust was a great fit for us.
What are some alternatives?
spin - Spin is the open source developer tool for building and running serverless applications powered by WebAssembly.
logos - Create ridiculously fast Lexers
hyperscan - High-performance regular expression matching library
concrete - Concrete: TFHE Compiler that converts python programs into FHE equivalent
actix - Actor framework for Rust.
sqlx - 🧰 The Rust SQL Toolkit. An async, pure Rust SQL crate featuring compile-time checked queries without a DSL. Supports PostgreSQL, MySQL, and SQLite.
wit-bindgen - A language binding generator for WebAssembly interface types
obm_confluent_blog - Open Bank Mark as will be used for the Confluent Blog, with ssl and multiple types in the same topic.
wasmCloud - wasmCloud allows for simple, secure, distributed application development using WebAssembly components and capability providers.
papers - ISO/IEC JTC1 SC22 WG21 paper scheduling and management
bastion - Highly-available Distributed Fault-tolerant Runtime
mask - 🎭 A CLI task runner defined by a simple markdown file